Inserting hyperlinks

…If people are going to be viewing your presentation at a kiosk.…You can give them more control over where they go, by…creating hyperlinks that will take them to different slides, websites, even email.…Same goes for your as a presenter, if you want…more control over where you're going next you can use hyperlinks.…And that's what we're going to discuss in this movie.…We'll continue working with our New Hire Orientation project.…We left off with these shapes and connection lines.…You can see I've added a little pizzaz to the formatting.…We're going to go back up though, to slide number one and begin there.…

Let's say we want to create a little button that allows…people to move to the next slide or previous slide.…Well on slide one we need a button that will take them to the next slide.…So let's go up to Shapes.…We've been working with those.…And choose triangle.…Next we'll move it down into the bottom left hand corner.…Let's double click inside and type in the word, next.…Alight.…Let's deselect by clicking in the background.…

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Released

4/30/2014

At some point in our lives, we all have to make a presentation. Keynote is a popular choice. Though it's streamlined and easy to use (like a lot of Apple products), we could all use a hand building our first Keynote slideshow. In this course, David Rivers teaches how to use Keynote to its full potential, and create presentations that both entertain and inform. Learn how to choose slide layouts; add text, images, audio and video, animation, and eye-catching effects; use transitions to ease the moves between slides; and get set up to deliver a smooth presentation. Plus, learn how to share your presentation as a movie, a PDF, a printout, or even on iCloud.

Note: This training applies to Keynote 2014, which comes with OS X Mavericks. You may not be able to open the exercise files for this course in earlier versions of Keynote.